From Business and financial news – CNNMoney.com: Phone customers ditch carriers faster than ever

Verizon… are you reading this?!  My loyalty to you is now on a timer!!  Better treat us better…  I have been very unhappy with them recently… I’m just waiting for that one mistake from them that will make me move…

==========================================================

The average cell phone customer now switches carriers as soon as his or her second two-year contract is up. That startling decline in loyalty is causing wireless companies to rethink the way they do business, according to a new study released Monday.

from Business and financial news – CNNMoney.com

From The UberReview: FAA gives OK to space tourism from the USA for 2014

If you grew up like me, watching the Jetsons jet around in their aircrafts, commuting to work in their flying hovercars, flying them on air highways, and spend a holiday on the Moon, or Mars, or Saturn then this might jerk a tear from your eyes.

Starting in 2014, space tourism will begin to spread its wings in the United States, rocket planes and spaceships to carry passengers beyond the atmosphere, similar to the suborbital hops taken by Mercury astronauts Alan Shepard and Virgil “Gus” Grissom in 1961, are being built and tested, with commercial flight services targeted to begin in 2013 or 2014.

Another perk will be commercial flights that will take passengers from one location to another on Earth, but that will be flying at an altitude of 62 miles, allowing the passengers to experience weightlessness and giving them a view of the Earth’s curvature and of black space.

Will I go to space? Tragically not. I don’t have the physical fortitude for that kind of trip (read I’m a wimp, I can barely stand on a chair because I’m afraid of heights…) but I’m sure they’ll have plenty of customers. George Nield, associate administrator for the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation also testified that they expect commercial space tourism to take up to a 1 billion $ marked within 10 years.

source

from The UberReview

From Ars Technica: Facebook says it may sue employers who demand job applicants’ passwords


Facebook has taken a stand against what it calls a “distressing increase” in reports of employers demanding the Facebook passwords of employees and job applicants.

One such report came from the Associated Press this week, which detailed cases of interviewers asking applicants for Facebook usernames and passwords, a clear invasion of privacy if we’ve ever heard of one. Employers examining applicants’ and employees’ activity on social media networks isn’t new—but typically it is restricted to what information users have made publicly available to everyone. Facebook said it could seek policy changes or file lawsuits to prevent employers from demanding passwords.

Read the rest of this article...

 

from Ars Technica

From Ars Technica: Witnesses warn Verizon-Comcast deal will damage competition


The antitrust subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee heard a wide range of views on the merits of a plan for Verizon Wireless to buy $3.6 billion of spectrum from a consortium of cable companies. Representatives for the firms argued that the transaction would not reduce competition between them, but opponents portrayed the deal as another step in the slow death of telecommunications competition.

At Wednesday’s hearing, Verizon’s Randal Milch emphasized that Verizon Wireless was facing a “spectrum crunch.” He wants to buy spectrum currently held by a consortium of three cable companies. Comcast, Time Warner, and Bright House bought the spectrum in the 2006 Advanced Wireless Services auction, but after careful analysis they concluded that they couldn’t afford to launch an independent wireless company. So they started looking for a buyer for the spectrum, and eventually inked a deal with Verizon.

Read the rest of this article...

 

 

from Ars Technica

From Ars Technica: Zynga buys Draw Something maker OMGPOP, will soon own everyone and everything


Four weeks ago, only people who follow and play social games pretty closely had heard of New-York-based developer OMGPOP. Today, over 35 million people have downloaded the company’s asynchronous art-guessing game Draw Something, and the company has attracted a Zynga buyout offer that AllThingsD is reporting is worth more than $200 million.

OMGPOP has been around since 2006, creating 35 other social games first on its own social network and then on Facebook and mobile platforms. But today’s sale seems designed to strike while the company is incredibly hot with Draw Something‘s meteoric success—the game generated 1 billion drawings across 84 languages in the last week, a peak of 3,000 per second.

Draw Something‘s quick rise is a bit hard to decipher, considering that countless other Pictionary-style games have failed to catch fire on iOS and Facebook, including many with much deeper gameplay and features than OMGPOP’s extremely basic title. It could be that Draw Something‘s simplicity, along with a design that allows for play sessions as short as a minute or two, appeals to players that don’t have time to get fully absorbed in social games. Or maybe it just illustrates the exponential marketing power of having seemingly all of your friends stumble on to a single multiplayer game all at once.

As one anonymous OMGPOP backer told AllThingsD, “No one had any idea that this would take off, and no one knows why it did.” But OMGPOP said during a conference call that the new association with Zynga will let them quickly add new features like chat, photo galleries, and possibly the ability to draw your own profile picture to broaden the game’s appeal even further.

The company also said it currently has “no plans” to change the game’s name to something like Draw With Friends, to match fellow Zynga mobile hit Words With Friends. That game also came to Zynga though a buyout of developer Newtoy in 2010, one of 14 acquisitions the company made in a 12-month period leading up to its IPO last year. At this rate, we wouldn’t be that surprised if, ten years from now, every single major game developer and publisher is just a Zynga subsidiary.

 

from Ars Technica

From Ars Technica: Hands-on: NetZero to offer no-contract 4G mobile hotspot service


Two things surprised us in the last few days: first, NetZero still exists. This is the company that had ubiquitous ads for its dial-up Internet service in the early 2000s (in fact, still sells dial-up). Second, that company is entering a new product arena: mobile hotspots.

The new mobile access points from NetZero come in both USB stick and hotspot form. This is unique because they fill out tiers of usage not covered by hotspot plans available from big carriers like Sprint and Verizon. They also come without contracts.

Read the rest of this article...

 

from Ars Technica